Your logic is flawed on many levels. First of all, some P&S do have various forms of binning and have for years.. so ya, it's doable. Problem is the SLR market place is a different beast. Most magazines, stock photo places and clients will not accept a 4.5MP image in this day and age. It just doesn't have what they need in terms of workable resolution. IMHO 9MP is enough.

Also I'm not sure what you mean overlapping the other two color...

Can you name a P&S that have pixel binning? (I am not talking about down sizing after DSP). It should be a big deal for the P&S. I am surprised that Nobody ever advertised it. If you pick 4 pixel with the same color, there are other 2 color in between the 4 pixels. So if you bin the 4 into one. The other color also will be binned. so all the 4 pixel of the same color square are over lapping each other.

Several recent PowerShots, cameras from Fuji, Panasonic, etc., all do pixel binning (for the 'low-light' mode). On the other end of the spectrum, Phase One does it, too, in the P65+. One notable difference - all of the sensors with Bayer masks which are capable of binning are CCD, not CMOS.

...seeing what's soon to come in terms of the revised 300 and 400, I think overall it's a good thing, and nothing to get freaked out over

Well, to be completely honest, the $11,000 suggested retail price of the new 400mm f/2.8L IS II does sort of freak me out...

that's true, I can't say I'm ecstatic about the price tag ... but I think there's enough existing 300s and 400s out there to keep people happy for now. maybe canon thinks we're all going to get huge raises over the next few years. or that sports PJ agencies will suddenly start turning huge profits.

maybe they feel that, since Sigma is going "high-end" all of a sudden, canon needs to be "even higher-end" and more expensive/exclusive

If readout noise is indeed significant, then yes, it would be advantageous. But is it? Usually readout noise becomes important for very low S/N in an image, i.e. underexposed parts such as deep shadows, and limits the dynamic range available. I wonder at what exposure level the readout noise becomes comparable to the photon noise.

I asked around to find out if software could correct what the lack of an AA filter could bring about. Most notably; moire. The general consensous was it was possible.

I don't think it's possible. Once you get spatial aliasing (moire) the signal is irreparably damaged. Trying to reconstruct the original signal is a non-unique mathematical problem. It's been tried in other signal processing applications where aliasing is much more of a problem. The solution is to keep the AA filter, and to design a filter with cutoffs as sharp as possible right at Nyquist.

For comparison, seismic recordings are always made with an analog AA filter up front. That said, moire is not nearly as extensive a problem as aliasing in seismic recordings.

If we look at a similar problem when deciding on Noise Reduction strategy, most would agree that we prefer the camera to leave all the noise in the picture and allow the photographer to decide how much details to sacrifice later during post processing. Software NR allow us to fine tune our personal preferred balance to noise vs details.

canon rumors FORUM

roger

But I doubt Canon will do something that revolutionary with 1Ds4. Just doesn't sound like Canon. They always try new technologies on some lower-end cameras instead of taking risks on their flagship models.

I sometimes wonder if magazines set minimum MP limits so that they automatically exclude pictures taken from compact cameras...

Doing a quick google on this subject reveals that some stock agencies will not accept less than 12MP - I'm sure that will jump as soon as all of the pro Nikon gear has more MP.

I don't do stock photography, I do advertising. Ads are turned in as 300 dpi PDFs, if the photo in the ad fits that criteria it doesn't matter what it was shot with. A ten megapixel camera will give you in excess of 300 dpi as an 8x10.

"In fact my last shoot I did with the Pentax K20D was over kill considering the size of the support i.e. about 8Ã—10 inches. In fact I had to reduce the image size to get down to 300 dpi for Pre Press. I would have been quite comfortable with a 8-10 mega pixel DSLR. The only grain I see when published with a 10 mega pixel camera in double page landscape format is the â€œtramâ€ grain of the printing press of around 133 dpi."

Phase One does it this way (pdf). They practically do an option c) which is: separating green from red and blue into two overlapping "layers" to reduce the gaps in pixel density and as a result can use method a slightly different method a) to bin the pixels. Considering, that the pixel-density of a fullframe-sensor at 45mp would be at least double as high as on a medium-format p45+ sensor, so it might even be possible to use this method whithout rotating the green-layer.

Another Example of how it could be done is shown by fuji's exr technics. Here it's basically another arrangement of the color-array to do 1:2 binning called pixel fusion. The article linked explains it very well.

I guess at the end, the only one who can give a real answer on this issue is canon itself - but even regarding registered patents by canon does not really deliver any clear answer at the current time.

Thanks. These are the best information that I have ever run into. So far only Fuji and Phase one officially claim the pixel binning. The Panansonic webcam is a totally different animal. the phase one article brings out some very interesting point. when doing a 4 to one pixel binning,the resolution actually decreased to by a factor of 16, due to the over lapping of the binned super pixel. Phase one does not claim the resolution factor. It just says better than 16. From my point of view. Fuji sensor is deigned to be pixel binning. Phase one is kind of a stop-gap. The other point and shoot low light setting may be nothing more than the downsizing of the picture to average out the noise for the pixel peeper to make the picture looks good. Let us face the fact. Pixel binning is a BIG deal. I doubt that Canon or any other camera maker will hind such a BIG selling point from the public.